Take A Walking Tour of Portland’s Sinful Past

Want to find out about the parts of Portland’s past that won’t be in any history book? Then join historian Doug Kenck-Crispin on a walking tour of Portland’s sinful past on Sunday November 1, also known as the “Day of the Dead”

Kenck-Crispin, the Ribald Resident Historian of ORHistory.com will lead walkers on a tour of the dark parts of the Rose City. Visitors will have a chance to visit the saloons gambling halls and bordellos that thrived in Old Town.

The tour will stop at famous spots of debauchery in Portland, many of which are still in operation today. The tour will begin at Floyd’s Coffee, located at 118 SW Couch St. and end outside of Mary’s Club, one of the city’s most historic strip clubs.

Related Slideshow: Oregon’s Disturbing History of Coastal Killers

Christian Michael Longo

Christian Michael Longo was sentenced to death in 2003 for killing his wife and three children. Their bodies were found in costal waterways near Newport shortly before Christmas, 2001.

Longo was arrested in Mexico where he was impersonating a travel writer about a month after the killings of his wife and three young children, ages 2,3 and 4. He made the FBI’s top 10 most wanted list after disappearing days after the gruesome discovery of his family’s bodies. His wife and youngest daughter were found in suitcases under a dock of a marina near the family’s house.

Prosecutors argued the murders were premeditated and that amid financial and marital troubles, Longo wanted out.

Edward Paul Morris

Under the guise of a surprise trip to the Tillamook Forest in 2002 near the Oregon Coast, Edward Paul Morris instead shot and killed his entire family along Route 6. Morris was sentenced to life in prison in 2004 for killing his pregnant wife and their three children, ages 10, 8 and 4.

Troy Culver

Twenty years after 16-year-old Walter Thomas Ackerson, Jr. went missing, his killer confessed to beating and throwing his body off a bridge. Ackerson was killed in 1990 after taking a leave from the Angell Job Corps in Yachats with three other students. One of the students, Troy Culver, admitted 20 years after Ackerson was considered missing, that he beat and killed the teen. The three boys then tossed him over a bridge.

Culver was sentenced to 10 years in prison while the other two students received immunity for their testimonies.

Horacio Alberto Reyes-Cam

Horacio Alberto Reyes-Camarena stabbed Maria Zetina and her sister, Angelica Zetina, and dumped their bodies along U.S. 101 near the Oregon coast. But Angelica survived and was able to identify her attacker, who was given the death penalty in 1997.

Charley Brennan

The Main Street Bakery in Myrtle Point became the site of a bloody axe murder in 1930. Hazel McGee was found dead by a salesman who entered the bakery and then found a young woman dead in her apartment upstairs, a blood-soaked axe nearby. Police later discovered that McGee, 24, had been seen kissing bakery owner Charley Brennan.

Shortly after police listed Brennan as a suspect, a fisherman found his body on the Couquille River. His death was ruled an apparent suicide.

David Joseph Pedersen and

Two white supremacists were charged in 2011 with killing and taking the car of an Oregon teen who went missing on a trip to Newport. His body was later found in the woods of western Oregon. David Joseph Pedersen and his girlfriend, Holly Grigsby, were charged after their “reign of terror” on a trip down the West Coast during which they killed three others in Washington and California, in addition to the 19-year-old from Oregon.

Anthony Paul "Tony" Mulli

Dorene Raterman, just 15 years old, was killed less than a mile from her home after biking to Del Ray Beach. Anthony Paul Tony Mullins was sentenced to life in prison after admitting to Raterman's murder and kidnapping. Tiac Eastman, who worked with Mullins as a dishwasher at a motel in Seaside and was with him the night of Raterman’s murder, was also charged with hindering the prosecution.

The Coastal Killer Bobby

The Coastal Killer Bobby Jack Fowler died in an Oregon prison where he was serving time for rape and kidnapping. But he has been linked to two murders of Oregon teenagers in Newport as well as three “Highway of Tears” cases in British Columbia, Canada where 18 women vanished from B.C. highways from 1969 to 2006.

Girley Logsdon Crum Jr.

Girley Logsdon Crum Jr. was charged in 1996 with murdering a family in a mobile home park in the small coastal town of Bandon. Crum had just been released from a parole violation before killing a couple, their two children and the woman’s brother. Crum had previously been arrested for robbing someone with a screwdriver.